My question concerns the rate of change for vectors. The rate of change is given by:
$\frac{d\vec{G}}{dt}_{space} = \frac{d\vec{G}}{dt}_{body}+\vec{\omega}\times\vec{G}$.
I'm then asked to derive the corresponding relation between:
$\frac{d\vec{G_1}\cdot \vec{G_2}}{dt}_{space}$ and $\frac{d\vec{G_1}\cdot \vec{G_2}}{dt}_{body}$
With $\vec{G_1}$ and $\vec{G_2}$ as two arbitrary vectors.
I'm not entirely sure how to go about this. My reasoning so far is that since $\vec{G_1}\cdot \vec{G_2}$ is a dot product, the derivative has to be 0. I've tried to make sense of this in a physical sense and I suppose that since the dot product describes the "effect" of the first vector on the second (for instance one force on another) this relation is the same between coordinate systems and doesn't really change in time.
However, I'm not sure if this is correct - especially since the rate of change between coordinate systems also involves a cross product and you can't take the cross product of a vector and a scalar?